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Page 141 text:
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SANDAL PHON 1 ii OFFICE A0 1 ,lfsg ii, wr X, 1- ,f l Miaaeru na , f Mm ' 5 .X 'Hr' fkl 1 I . f v nm Nx20fl4' M ' Renaud .sa XX ,QAM D,.5,+f,J':r .. .,-.-.. X, Sf ii 1 vLl f4:3 'f2'r-:- X . 1 . if x ff 1 XX ki X y V :X . 1 'u L ,i 1 new- JJ , --fflfi-'J X , X 2 x M X Ss .A .N , Y 9 , A . r.lq,, 'viii 'N Nnighiitu 'i' - f K pp -5 ' 1 Mi, Y a , . A X V f W X .. ,W A- 1 new +5,g-gzifg ji . R5 vij,.1-af' V 5o?5,vx .W 52' 'ee' 'Mff r If 'R vs X' . 'fy I .1 illl' i X KW yy ,A .2 il , f l W wh All li if Iii MQW rl! -i , . ,. , y i if ' ,,.,,,i ' r -' .sqlipgil j, 'lf ,Iliii im .'VJV1sJSr,ip . v-vl Ax iiil v. INCE' ' X1 Ulf HHH' 'nf it , , wk' 'y V M Class W ' it is decreed on high that Class of 1926, of Saint J: fully aware of thi clare this instru 1 We l and ill all things eventually cease to exist wi mseph Academy, City of Columbus St s fact, being of sound mind and jud mlnt to be our last will and testaml iereby wish for Sister Superior and happiness. May we express our gratitu kind interest in our welfa Relying on th the Senior school , fe, the , ate of Ohio, gment, hereby de- int. our teachers many days of peace de and appreciation to Sister Superior for her re and moral and intellectual development. eir loyalty to Alma Mater, we intrust to our faithful friends, Class of 1927, the responsibility of maintaining Notre Dame ideals, leadership, school spirit, a bigger and better Annual, our coveted class- room and fond memories, our reserved seats in the chapel and in the hall, our precedence in the cafeteria, and our lockers. 1. Frances Bradley, our Class President, bequeaths her official, classical, scientific, historical and natural curiosity to Kathleen Rubadue. 2. Ruth Hinterschied wills her secrets for a sylph-like Hgure to Mildred Amicon. 3. Mildred Douglas and Mary Deinlein, our two M, D.'s exchange their rippling laughter as a cure for Senior troubles. 4. Helen Campbell shares her retiring UID disposition with Marie Fleming. 5. Mary Catherine Rohr is to have Margaret Zettler's place as class star. 6. Mary Margaret Dodd 's successor as poet laureate is Margaret Ritter. 7. Ann Leonard wills her position as butler and footman to Iluberta Zettler. 8. Frances Staudt transmits her many worries to Gertrude Lennon. 9. Dorothy Hill bequeaths her superfiuous height to Theodora Hammond. Dorothy believes in the balance of power. Daze one hundred th' u-ty-nine 7 ' if . if f p, fi, 31 was fi ii ffi My 'QQ ,,,i iii' 1 9 ,... GQ riffs . 1 i f A f 1, Yi 4 ' nr' i V , 2 l,l' f' .,l Y , , 1 if ' Ji lf: 7' 1' ' sf' film' W! 1 f ll' 1' I X UAV
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Page 140 text:
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S A N D A L P H 0 N The Beethoven Club President ---------- MARGARET ZE'r'rI.ER Vice President - - MARY MARGARET Donn Seeretarr - - - - - EMMA ALIBRANNDO .I Treasurer ----------- MARY BRENNAN The Beethoven Club of St. Joseph Academy is composed of the music pupils of the Craduate and Third Rhetoric Classes. The aim of the Club is to give the members a right appreciation of good music, and to make them familiar with the lives and works of the great masters. The members are divided into two sections, which give, as often as possible, one half hour each week to the study of music history. Once a month all the members meet for a short program, and thus each one is given the opportunity of playing before a miniature audience Calthough a very critical onej and is helped to acquire some of the poise and self-confidence necessary for a good public performance. After the program the remaining half hour is given to memory contests, and other useful methods of arousing musical interest and appreciation. The Mozart Club President ----------- VIRGINIA JAEGER Vice President - ------ MARIAN IMS Secretary. - - - CECILIA IIERBOLTZIIEIMER Treasurer ------------ JANE DOWNEY The members of the First and Second Rhetoric Classes, who study music at St. Joseph Academy, have united this year in an organization which they call the Mozart Club. Like its elder sister, the Beethoven Club, this music club endeavors by weekly periods devoted to the study of music history, to instil into its members an appreciation of the lives and works of the great composers. The monthly meetings which give opportunity for playing before an audience, are found to be very beneficial in ridding young students of stage-fright, so detrimental to public performances. The members enjoy the half hour which follows the program, during which interesting games are played, all tending to increase their knowledge and love for good music. Jeanne D'Arc Club The Jeanne d'Arc Club is a most informal one. The sole purpose of its members is to continue their French, and add to their meagre store of knowl- edge all that they can about 'tLa Belle France and her great literature. It meets in the Senior classroom every NVcdnesday afternoon at two-thirty. page one hundred thirty-eight O
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Page 142 text:
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SANDALPHON 10. Elizabeth McDonald would like to have Frances Heir distribute her rare collection, including hymn books, erasers, chalk, Latin text editions and tablets. 11. Mary Brennan wills to Geraldine Wheat her record for punctuality. 12. Doris Shannon inherits from Marie NVinkel her dignity and school- girl complexion. 13. Meldreth Moore gives Margaret Gale her Websterian Vocabulary. 14. Geraldine Zack transmits to Constance O'Brien her winning smile that she may increase her many friendships. 15. Mary Catherine Green wills her curls to Helen Hughes. 16. Elizabeth llinterschied leaves her prestige as the youngest graduate to Catherine llennessey. 17. Virginia Ilarold bestows on Anna Katherine lleim her grace and aesthetics. 18. Catherine Lyons, after balancing her scientific knowledge, wishes liosina Deinlein to succeed her in the Class of '27. 19. Alice Blair transmits her dramatic ability to Catherine Joliffe. 20. Martha. Thone gives her love of athletics to Marion Cassady. 21. Gertrude Dehner donates her artistic ability to draw straight lines and rounded curves to Selma Fraas. 22. Mary Rodenfels willingly gives to Margaret Gaffney her luck Cgood and badj in recitations for which she hasn't studied. 23. Dorothy Young wills Lucille O'Harra her position as guard on the basketball team. 24. Mary Jackson bequeaths to Emma Alibrando her religious fervor. 25. Margaret Ziegler inherits Lucille Fuller's wavy tresses. 26. Mary Ritchey willingly bestows her carefree disposition on Esther Colange . 27. Mary Korn receives the linguistic record of two hundred fifty words a minute from Mildred Burns. 28. Gertrude Ansel wills her strong determination to her sister Grace. 29. Margaret McDevitt is very fortunate to be included in the will of Agnes Dunnigan who bequeaths to her her admirable equilibrium. 30. Elizabeth Enright bequeaths her love of English Classics and her slow- ness of speech to Alice Killilea. 31. Lucille Fulcher inherits Mary Louise Ca.rroll's reticence. 32. Catherine Cummins donates her whys and wherefores to Resina Falk. 33. Coletta 'l'ebben wills her sympathetic heart to Margaret Weiland. 34. Eleanor Maurer bequeaths her vocal ability to Eleanor Harding. 35. Catherine Weiland confides her love of ease and comfort to Hortense Cannon. 36. Louise Packard is perhaps the luckiest girl in the 'l'hird Rhetoric Class. Elizabeth Rath gives her a share in the earth and sky-a water wa.ve and a sunny disposition. 327. And finally Margaret Jennings leaves Mary Henne, her reference books on wills and testaments. In witness whereof, we, the Classiof 1926, the testators, declare this to be our last will, and hereby revoke all former dispositions made by us. tSignedj SENIORS. Per M. Jennings and E. Rath. page one hundred forty
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